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University of Florida Book of Insect Records [1/1, 30 ed.]

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30th Annual Edition

T.J. Walker Editor

UFBIR University of Florida Book of Insect Records

2023 UF|IFAS

30th Annual Edition

T.J. Walker Editor

UFBIR University of Florida Book of Insect Records

2023 UF|IFAS Powered by EDIS

The University of Florida Book of Insect Records (UFBIR) names insect champions and documents their achievements. Each chapter deals with a different category of record. Those who are interested in augmenting or improving this collection of insect records are invited to contribute. © University of Florida 2023 As provided by copyright law, each chapter in this book is copyrighted by the author as of the date of first publication. For noncommercial use, this preface and the chapters in this book may be freely reproduced and distributed in part or in whole provided the source is cited. The suggested citation for a chapter is: [author's name]. [year (see publication date at bottom of chapter heading)]. [chapter title]. Chapter [n] in University of Florida Book of Insect Records, 2023. http://gnv.ifas.ufl.edu/~tjw/recbk.htm The suggested citation for the entire work is: Walker, T.J., ed. 2023. University of Florida Book of Insect Records, 2023. http://gnv.ifas.ufl.edu/~tjw/recbk.htm For commercial use of a single chapter, contact its author. For commercial use of all chapters or any group of chapters, contact the editor. Any royalties from commercial use of a single chapter will accrue to its author. Any royalties from commercial use of two or more chapters will accrue to the Department of Entomology & Nematology, University of Florida. This work is subject to copyright. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use. The authors and the editor are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the editor nor the authors give a warranty, expressed or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made. University of Florida: https://www.ufl.edu Gainesville, US-FL 32611-0620 | Fax: (352) 392-0190 | E-mail: [email protected] University of Florida, Department of Entomology & Nematology: https://entnemdept.ifas.ufl.edu Bldg. 970, 1881 Natural Area Drive, Steinmetz Hall - Gainesville, US-FL 32611-0620 | (352) 273-3901 University of Florida, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences (IFAS): https://ifas.ufl.edu P.O. Box 110180 Gainesville, US-FL 32611-0180 | 352-448-1435 Equal Opportunity Institution (EOI): https://solutionsforyourlife.ufl.edu/additional_pages/policies.html UF/IFAS Powered by Electronic Data Information System (EDIS): https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu P.O. Box 110810 Gainesville, US-FL 32611 | (352) 392-1761 Useful links (check for updates): UF Marston Science Library: https://www.uflib.ufl.edu/msl Agricultural Online Access (AGRICOLA): https://agricola.nal.usda.gov - US Department of Agriculture - National Agriculture Library Apicultural Abstracts: https://www.ibra.org.uk/categories/20080606_7 - International Bee Research Association (IBRA) BEE-L: https://listserv.albany.edu:8080/archives/bee-l.html - Informed discussion of beekeeping issues and bee biology (University at Albany) Biological Abstracts: https://www.thomsonreuters.com/products_services/scientific/Biological_Abstracts ISI Web of Knowledge: https://apps.isiknowledge.com | MEDLINE: https://medline.cos.com Monarch Watch: https://www.monarchwatch.org - The Kansas Biological Survey, University of Kansas WebLUIS Search System: https://web.uflib.ufl.edu/wl.html - University of Florida Zoological Record: https://www.thomsonreuters.com/products_services/scientific/Zoological_Record - Thomson Reuters

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Table of contents Preface Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Chapter 20 Chapter 21 Chapter 22 Chapter 23 Chapter 24 Chapter 25 Chapter 26 Chapter 27 Chapter 28 Chapter 29 Chapter 30 Chapter 31 Chapter 32 Chapter 33 Chapter 34 Chapter 35 Chapter 36 Chapter 37 Chapter 38 Chapter 39 Chapter 40

Fastest flyer Greatest host range Longest diapause Most tolerant of cold Most tolerant of desiccation Shortest generation time Smallest eggs Most spectacular mating Fastest wing beat Least specific sucker of vertebrate blood Longest insect migration Longest life cycle Most instars Most parental sharing of brood care Resistant to most insecticides Shortest sexual life cycle Lowest lifetime fecundity Highest lifetime fecundity Adapted to greatest depths Least oxygen dependent Most heat tolerant Most saline tolerant Most toxic venom Loudest Greatest host specificity Largest parasitoid brood Largest swarm Most spectacular batesian mimicry Greatest bioluminescence Largest Largest blood meal Largest lepidopteran wing span Longest Longest adult life Longest regularly repeated migration Most polyandrous Shortest reproductive life Smallest adult Fastest runner Largest eggs

T.J. Walker T.J. Dean R.A. Worth M.R. de Faria J.P.W. Hall K. Schwarz T. Li V.E. Cevallos D. Sieglaff C.W. Scherer L.M.A. Okedi C. Tipping Y. Zeng B.R. Sojack K. Vulinec B.L. Vasquez L. Yang B.C. Nygård H. Brueland A.A. Akers A. Rasmussen V. Sherwood D. Richman W.L. Meyer J.M. Petti G.H. Schneider J.M. Alvarez A. H. Sanchez-Arroyo M. Salvato H.C. Levy D.M. Williams K.E. McKenzie H.L. Kons Jr. D. Branscome R. Cetintas J. Akers Pence H. Cabrera-Mireles C.H. Welch J.E. Gahlhoff Jr. T.M. Merritt S. Vicidomini

20050301 page vi 20030401 1 19940501 4 19940501 5 19940501 6 19940501 7 19940508 8 19940501 9 19940501 10 19950508 11 19950508 12 19950508 13 19950508 14 19950508 15 19950508 16 19950508 17 19950508 18 19951215 19 19951215 20 19960501 21 19960501 22 19960501 23 19960501 24 19960501 25 19970415 26 19970415 27 19970415 28 19970415 29 19970415 30 19980417 31 20010421 32 19980417 38 19980417 39 19980417 41 19980417 42 19980417 43 19980417 44 19980417 45 19980417 46 19990731 47 20050209 48

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Preface © T.J. Walker 2023 BEGINNING IN 1994, graduate students in the Insect Ecology course at the University of Florida have contributed chapters to the University of Florida Book of Insect Records (UFBIR), a book that names insect champions and documents their achievements. Each chapter deals with a different category of record. For comparison, see the PDF of the 8th annual edition (2001) with 39 chapters: https://web.archive.org/web/20011120070847/http://www.ifas.ufl.edu/~tjw/ufbir.pdf

Preparation of chapters Before 1999, chapters were written by graduate students in an Insect Ecology course at the University of Florida, except for chapters 17 and 18, prepared by graduate students at the University of Bergen, Norway. Members of the Insect Ecology class proposed categories for new chapters, with the final list being determined by vote of the class. Each student chose a topic from the approved list, solicited nominations for champions, searched the secondary and primary literature, and wrote a chapter of no more than 1,500 words, including a brief abstract. The instructor/editor and two class members reviewed each chapter. The authors revised their chapters on the basis of the reviews. They then submitted new versions of their chapters to the editor for final review and acceptance for publication. Now chapters are solicited from anyone interested in researching an insect record and lengthier chapters are permitted. What is required is good scholarship and a willingness to augment or improve the content of UFBIR.

Publication of chapters Completed chapters are put on the World Wide Web as HTML documents in which the user's browser controls the document's format by referring to markup tags. Through 1999, complete chapters were also put on the web as PDF documents, which can be viewed and printed with a free download of Adobe Reader [https://get.adobe.com/reader] exactly as desktop-published.

Copyright and permitted uses As provided by copyright law, each chapter in this book is copyrighted by the author as of the date of first publication. For noncommercial use, this preface and the chapters in this book may be freely reproduced and distributed in part or in whole provided the source is cited. The suggested citation for a chapter is: [author's name]. [year (see publication date at bottom of chapter heading)]. [chapter title]. Chapter [n] in University of Florida Book of Insect Records, 2023. http://gnv.ifas.ufl.edu/~tjw/recbk.htm The suggested citation for the entire work is: Walker, T.J., ed. 2023. University of Florida Book of Insect Records, 2023. http://gnv.ifas.ufl.edu/~tjw/recbk.htm For commercial use of a single chapter, contact its author. For commercial use of all chapters or any group of chapters, contact the editor. Any royalties from commercial use of a single chapter will accrue to its author. Any royalties from commercial use of two or more chapters will accrue to the Department of Entomology & Nematology, University of Florida.

Submissions Contributed chapters and nominations for new chapters or for new champions for old chapters should be sent to: Thomas J. Walker — Editor, University of Florida Book of Insect Records UF Department of Entomology & Nematology: https://entnemdept.ifas.ufl.edu Bldg. 970, 1881 Natural Area Drive, Steinmetz Hall - Gainesville, US-FL 32611-0620 | (352) 273-3901 University of Florida, Gainesville, US-FL 32611-0620 | Fax: 352-392-0190 | E-mail: [email protected] NOTE: I will not answer questions that do not deal directly with UFBIR. vi

Chapter 1. Fastest flyer T.J. Dean - School of Physics, University of New South Wales at the Australian Defence Force Academy - 2003-IV-01 Editor's note: This version replaces an early version (1994-V-31) of chapter 1 by J.H. Byrd. - T.J. Walker, 2003-IV.

Abstract The insects with the highest reliably measured airspeeds are desert locusts Schistocerca gregaria (Forskål 1775) and corn earworm moths Helicoverpa zea Boddie 1850. These fly at average airspeeds of 33 and 28 km/h respectively, ~21 and 17 mph. Many insects surely fly faster, but their airspeeds have yet to be studied with modern methods. The highest sustained ground speed recorded is that of the black cutworm Agrotis ipsilon (Hufnagel 1766) which flies at speeds of 97-113 km/h (Showers & Sappington 1992).

measurements arose from the difficulty separating airspeed from ground speed. Airspeed is the speed relative to the air whereas ground speed (often the quantity actually measured) is the speed relative to the ground (Figure 1). This difficulty in separating airspeeds from ground speeds makes some early measurements obtained using 'less than conventional' methods (e.g., comparisons with the speed of trains, Twinn & al. 1948) useless for comparison purposes. This is why the reported (Hocking 1953) speed of 98 km/h for Austrophlebia costalis (Tillyard 1907) is not included here. Figure 1. Vector diagram showing the relationship between insect airspeed, wind speed and ground speed.

Introduction Insect airspeed is affected by mass, size, age, gender, feeding, water content, activity type, temperature, humidity, solar radiation, wind, oxygen level, ascent angle and even habitat isolation. The speed attainable by insects is currently poorly understood (Gauthreaux & al. 1998); indeed Dudley 1997 states that insect airspeed is one of the least known features of flight performance. This chapter details the current state of insect flight speed measurements and includes the most complete list of measured speeds to date (Table 1).

Methods Stevenson & al. 1995 attribute the large range of flight speeds measured being due to the different methodologies used (e.g. timing with stopwatches; wind tunnels; flight mills etc.). Insects flying freely often have higher speeds than those that are confined to small cages or tethered, although Wagner 1986 states that cage size has no influence on basic flight performance. While measurements have been made for insects flying up pheromone plumes, they are generally slower than freely flying insects (Kuenen & Carde 1993) and their speed decreases with proximity (Willis & al. 1991) and strength of the source (Meats & Osborne 2000; March & McNeil 2000). Riley & al. 1997 found that insects flying on flight mills partitioned their effort between lift and thrust substantially differently from those in free flight. Cooter & Armes 1997, Gatehouse & Hacket 1980, and Gatehouse & Woodrow 1987 consider that mills do not adversely affect the behaviour of the cotton bollworm Helicoverpa armigera (Hübner 1808). They do emphasize, however, that the results are meaningful only when used to provide comparative estimates of flight performance between experimental treatments. Other methods of monitoring insect activity include cameras (El-Sayed & al. 2000; Fry & al. 2000; Noldus & al. 2002; Hardie & Powell 2002), Doppler-radar autocorrelation analysis (Buchan & Satelle 1979; Sohal & Buchan 1981; Buchan & Moreton 1981; Renou & al. 1999; Knoppien & al. 2000), telescopic observation against the moon (Preuss & Preuss 1971), and roundabouts (Michel & al. 1977). For a full review of remote-sensing, telemetric and computer-based technologies see Reynolds & Riley 2002. In addition to effects of the methods employed on the measured speed, speed has been found to vary between laboratory and naturally reared specimens. McKibben & al. 1988 found that naturally reared cotton boll weevils Anthonomus grandis Boheman 1843 specimens had an average speed 1.2× greater than that of the laboratory reared specimens, although this was not found for 6 generations of the fruit fly Ceratitis capitata (Wiedemann 1824) (Economopoulos 1992). Significant variation has also been found within single species; a total of 7 authors have made over 400 measurements of the speed of the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria and found ground speeds ranging from 3 to 33 km/h (Table 1).

Results The most famous and oft-quoted insect flight speed is that of the deer botfly (genus Cephenemyia Latreille 1818), reputed to be able to fly at over 1,287 km/h (Townsend 1926). However, Langmuir 1938 refuted this claim, calculating that to attain this speed (equivalent to 0.5 horse power) the fly would have to consume 1.5 its own mass in fuel every second. Further observations by Langmuir 1938 found the maximum speed was more likely to be around 40 km/h. Some of the difficulties with early

The highest airspeeds reported in refereed literature obtained using a reliable method are those of the desert locust Schistocerca gregaria, 15 individuals having an average speed of reached 33 ± 3 km/h (mean ± SE) (Waloff 1972), and the corn earworm moth Helicoverpa zea, 10 individuals reaching an average speed of 28 ± 8 km/h (Quero & al. 2001). In the unrefereed literature, a noteworthy record is that of a ♂ horsefly Hybomitra hinei that was estimated to achieve an airspeed of ~145 km/h (89 mph) while chasing an air rifle pellet (Kunzig 2000). The highest sustained ground speed recorded is that of the black cutworm Agrotis ipsilon which flies at speeds of 97-113 km/h at heights of 300-600 m 'riding' on winds ahead of cold fronts (Showers & Sappington 1992) although this species only has an airspeed of 9-13 km/h (Jia & Cao 1992).

Discussion Insect flight speed has been found to be affected by the following insect characteristics: Mass (Dudley & Srygley 1994; Dudley 1997); Size (Larkin 1991; Fischer & Kutsch 2000); Age (Karlsson 1994; Banjaree 1988); Gender (Rogowitz & Chappell 2000; Willmott & Ellington 1997; Lingren & al. 1995); 5. Amount of feeding (David 1978; Fadamiro & Wyatt 1995); 6. Water content (Danks 2000; Lehmann & al. 2000); 7. Activity type (David & Hardie 1988; Quero & al. 2001; May 1999); 1. 2. 3. 4.

Also, insect flight speed is affected by the following environmental factors: 1. Temperature (Gilchrist & al. 1997; Isard & al. 2000; Fitzgerald & Underwood 2000; Elliott & al. 2000); 2. Humidity (Gunn 1937; Pielou & Gunn 1940; Dorner & Mulla 1962); 3. Solar radiation (Rudinsky & Vite 1956; Ostrand & al. 2000; Carde & Knowls 2000; Vicens & Bosch 2000; Lloyd 2000; Schneider 1965); 4. Wind (Aluja & al. 1993; Hardie & Young 1997); 5. Oxygen levels (Ellington & al. 1990; Joos & al. 1997; Harrison & Lighton 1998; Dekker & al. 2001); 6. Habitat isolation (Denno & al. 2001); 7. Ascent angle (Kutsch & al. 1999); Given the wide variety of possible effects on insect flight speed, studies of large numbers of insects from a single species have found that the distribution of speeds approximately follows a normal distribution (Tuxhorn & McShaffrey 1998; Nachtigall 2001; Dean & Drake 2002). Most insects have airspeeds of less than 21 km/h. All currently available measured insect speeds are listed in Table 1. It should be borne in mind, however, that many of the early measurements were made using inaccurate methods and may reflect only a single speed measurement.

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2

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Zolubas P., Skirkevicius A. 1992. Impact of wind speed on the behaviour of spruce bark beetle, Ips typographus L. Pheromones, 2/3, 23-30.

Diptera

unknown Photinus collustrans

Musca domestica

Glossinidae

Muscidae

Tabanidae

Syrphidae

Oestridae Psychodidae Schizophora Simuliidae

Glossina morsitans morsitans

Empididae Equidae Fanniidae

various various

Tabanus septentrionalis

Tabanus bovinus

Eristalis tenax Syritta pipiens Syrphus ribesii Hybomitra hinei Tabanidae unspecified Tabanus affinis

Musca sp. Tracheomyia macropi Phlebotomus ariasi Calliphoridae Simulium venustum

Stomoxys calcitrans

Drosophila sp. Rhamphomyia sp. Hippelates collusor Fannia canicularis

Drosophila melanogaster

Drosophila virilis

Aedes flavescens Aedes nearcticus Anopheles fuliginosus Anopheles melas Culex tarsalis Culex thalassius unknown Drosophilidae Drosophila hydei fed Drosophila hydei starved

Aedes aegypti

Phaenicia sericata Cecidomyidae Mayetiola destructor Chloropidae Hister merdarius Oscinella frit Culicidae Aedes aegypti female Aedes aegypti poor Aedes aegypti fast

Carpophilus hemipterus f Carpophilus hemipterus m Scolytidae Dendroctonus pseudotsugae Ips typographus various Calliphoridae Calliphora vicina

Nitidulidae

Dytiscidae Lampyridae

sp Prostephanus truncatus Prostephanus truncatus 20m/s wind Prostephanus truncatus 25m/s wind Prostephanus truncatus 32m/s wind Cerambycidae Phoracantha semipunctata in plume P. semipunctata outside plume Cicindelidae Cicindela hybrida

o f Coleoptera Bostrichidae

m/s 0.2 0.07 (0.01) 0.08 (0.01) 0.1 (0.01) 0.66 (0.21) 0.52 (0.14) 0.6 3 1.97 1.2 0.14-2.1 0.44 0.33 0.34-0.72 0.15 2 1.2 1 1.2 1.45-2.05 7 1.92 0.76 0.18 0.13 0.28 0.33 1.5 0.08-0.33 1.1 1.0 0.08-0.33 1.2 2.15 1.2 1.39 0.3 (0.085) 0.46 (0.11) 0.5 2 2 1.37 0.70 (0.01) 0.64 (0.02) 0.46 (0.02) 0.52 (0.01) 1.4 3.05 0.9 0.4-0.8 0.5-0.65 1.8 4.8 (0.1) 2.23 3.05 1.8 0.33 0.55 0.28 (0.032) 11.17 0.65-0.70 2.68 1.5 2.4 0.19 (0.03) 1.4-4.6 0.19 (0.01) 40.3 18 2.3 6.5 12.5 14 4 2.4 6.5 13.4 12.5

N/R/T/M   / A / A / WT 15 / A / A / WT 15 / A / A / WT 9 / A / A / WT 32 / A / A / WT 40 / A / A / WT   / A / A / FF   / X / A / FF  /?/G/? 123 / A / G / FF 123 / A / G / FF  /A/A/T  /A/A/T  /A/A/T   / N / G / FF   / X / G / FF   / X / A / FC   / X / A / FC   / X / A / FC   / A / A / FC   / A / G / FC   / A / G / FC   / A / G / FC  /A/A/M  /A/A/M  /A/A/M  /X/A/M   / A / G / FF   / A / A / FF 3/A/A/M 10 / A / A / M   / A / A / FC   / X / G / FF   / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF  /?/G/?   / A / G / WT   / A / G / WT  /A/A   / A / A / WT  /A/A/T   / A / G / FC 113 / A / A / WT 88 / A / A / WT 99 / A / A / WT 144 / A / A / WT 26 / A / A / M   / A / G / FC   / A / A / WT   / A / A / FC   / A / A / FC   / A / G / WT   / A / G / FF  /?/G/?   / A / G / FC   / A / G / FF   / A / A / FF   / A / A / FF 8 / A / G / FF  /X/G/?   / X / A / WT  /?/G/? 16 / A / A / M 3/A/A/M 8 / A / G / FF   / A / A / FC 9 / A / G / FF   / X / G / FF   / N / G / FF 71 / A / A / T&M   / A / G / FC   / X / G / FF   / X / A / FF  /A/A/T 10 / A / A / M   / A / G / FC  /?/G/?   / A / G / FF

reference Fadamiro 1996 Fadamiro 1996b Fadamiro 1996b Fadamiro 1996b Barata & Araujo 2001 Barata & Araujo 2001 Nachtigall 1996 Nachtigall 1996b Lane 1941 Lloyd 2000 Lloyd 2000 Wu & Laughlin 1994 Wu & Laughlin 1994 Rudinsky & Vite 1956 Zolubas & Skirkevicius 1992 Byers 1996 Schilstra & Hateren 1999a;b Schilstra 1999 Schilstra 1999 Yurkiewicz & Smyth 1966 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Briegel & al. 2001 Briegel & al. 2001 Briegel & al. 2001 Briegel & al. 2001 Kennedy 1939 Kennedy 1939 Hocking 1953 Hocking 1953 Bentley 1914 Snow 1980 Bailey & al. 1965 Snow 1980 Lane 1941 David 1978 David 1978 Lehmann 2001 Vogel 1967 Vogel 1966 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Marden & al. 1997 Marden & al. 1997 Marden & al. 1999 Marden & al. 2000 Hocking 1953 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Dorner & Mulla 1962 Nachtigall 1999 Nachtigall 1999b Colvin & al. 1989 Brady 1991 Lane 1941 Lewis & Taylor 1967 McKeown 1944 Bailey & al. 1973 Eddy & al. 1962 Golding & al. 2001 Lane 1941 Killick-Kendrick & al. 1986 Lane 1941 Hocking 1953 Hocking 1953 Golding & al. 2001 Collet & Land 1975 Golding & al. 2001 Kunzig 2000 Schwardt 1932 Hocking 1953 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Twinn & al. 1948 Demoll 1918 Magnan 1934 Hocking 1953 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Lane 1941 McKeown 1944

Lepidoptera

Hymenoptera

Homoptera

sp unknown Aphis fabae

m/s 0.5 0.76 0.13-0.28 various 0.54-0.67 various 3.15 (0.19) various 2.76 (0.19) Cicadellidae Circulifer tenellus 0.27-0.85 Miridae Lygus lineolaris 0.45 various various 3 Aleyrodidae Aleyrodes sp. 0.46 Bemisia tabaci 0.04-0.16 0.16-0.23 0.16-0.49 Aphididae Drepanosiphum platanoidis 0.91 Jacksonia papillata 0.37 Macrosiphum pisum 0.55 Myzus persicae 0.3-0.75 Phorodon humili 7 Cicadellidae Typhlocyba sp. 1.16 Delphacidae Nilaparvata lugens 22.4 Apidae unknown 3-15.7 unknown 4.9 Apis mellifera 2.6 4.14 3.3-5.1 0.19 (0.025) 2.2-3.6 Apis mellifera drone 1.8 1.8 A. mellifera worker empty 8.3 4.9 5.6 3.6 A. mellifera worker full 7.2 2.4 Apis mellifera worker 5.56 3.75 2.5 6.12 6 14 Ichneumonidae Ichneumon sp. 1.67 Vespidae Vespa crabro 5.9 unknown unknown 5.4 Hesperiidae Chioides catillus 3.6 (0.2) Dryas julia 3.1 (0.6) unknown 5.1 Urbanus simplicius 3.5 unknown 5.3 Calpodes ethlius 7.5 Cyclosemia anastomosis 5.7 Heliopetes sp. 4.1 Typhedanus undulatus 7.4 Urbanus proteus 4.5 6.1 Libytheidae Libythia bachmani 4.47-6.7 Lycaenidae Lycaena phlaeas 2.86 Lymantriidae Lymantria dispar 4.5 4.7 5.3 0.64 (0.18) 0.53 (0.06) 0.48 (0.06) Noctuidae Agrochola lychnidis 4.35 Agrotis ipsilon 26.8-31.3 Schistocerca gregaria 3.5 7.9 (2.3) S. gregaria casting 5.7 (2.4) Noctuidae-Sphingidae unknown 4.47-6.7 Nymphalidae Adelpha iphiclus 3.6 Agranlis vanillae 3.6 2.8 5 Anartia fatima 3.6 Anartia fatima females 2.6 (0.2) Anartia fatima males 2.5 (0.4) Archaeoprepona demophon 7 Cissia sp. 2.2

o f Ephemeroptera unknown Hemiptera Aphididae

N/R/T/M  /?/G/?   / A / G / FC   / A / A / WT   / A / A / WT   / A / A / WT   / A / A / WT   / A / A / WT  /A/A/M   / A / G / FF   / A / G / FC   / A /   / FC 30 / A / G / WT 30 / A / A / WT   / A / G / FC   / A / G / FC   / A / G / FC   / A / A / FF   / A / A / FC   / A / G / FC  /X/A/M 100 / A / G / FF  /?/G/? 16 / A / A / M   / A / G / FC  /A/A/T 11 / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF   / A / A / FF  /A/A/T  /?/G/?   / A / G / HR   / A / G / HR  /A/A/T  /?/G/?   / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF  /A/A/T   / A / G / FF  /A/A/T   / A / G / FF   / A / G / FC  /?/G/?  /?/G/? 2 / A / A / FF 6 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 2 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 2 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 98 / A / G / FF 98 / A / A / FF   / A / G / FF   / A / G / FC 24 / A / G / WT 24 / A / G / WT 24 / A / G / WT 20 / A / A / WT 20 / A / A / WT 20 / A / A / WT   / A / G / FC  /A/G/T 47 / A / G / FF 10 / A / A / WT 10 / A / A / WT   / A / A / FC 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 2 / A / G / FF 1 / A / A / FF 7 / A / A / FF 5 / A / A / FF 27 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF

reference o Lane 1941 Lepidoptera (continued) Lewis & Taylor 1967 Kennedy & Thomas 1974 Haine 1955 Hardie & Young 1997 Hardie & Young 1997 Lawson & al. 1951 Stewart & Gaylor 1994 Nilakhe & Buainain 1988 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Byrne 1999 Isaacs & al. 1999 Isaacs & al. 1999 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Kennedy & Thomas 1974 Hardie & al. 1996 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Chen & al. 1984 Osborne & al. 1999 Lane 1941 Hocking 1953 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Nachtigall & al. 1995 Golding & al. 2001 McKeown 1944 Park 1923 Schnell-larsen 1934 Hansson 1945 Lane 1941 Capaldi & al. 2000 Capaldi & al. 2000 Hansson 1945 Lane 1941 Beutler 1950 Demoll 1918 Magnan 1934 Park 1923 Von Frisch 1927 Wenner 1963 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Lane 1941 Lane 1941 Srygley 2001 Srygley 2001 Srygley 2001 Srygley 2001 Srygley 2001 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Balciunas & Knopf 1977 Balciunas & Knopf 1977 Parman 1926 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Kuenen & Carde 1993 Kuenen & Carde 1993 Kuenen & Carde 1993 Carde & Knols 2000 Carde & Knols 2000 Carde & Knols 2000 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Showers & Sappington 1992 Lingren & al. 1995 Quero & al. 2001 Quero & al. 2001 Callahan 1965 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Srygley 2001 Correale & Crocker 1976 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Srygley & Kingsolver 2000 Srygley & Kingsolver 2000 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994

m/s 3.9 3 3.6 4.9 8.9-11.2 D. plexippus parasite infected 0.9622 0.9345 Dione juno 3.8 Dryadula phaetusa 3.7 Dryas iulia 4.5 Eueides lybia 2.3 Eunica alcmena 3 Eunica sp. 4.8 Hamadryas feronia 4.4 Hamadryas ipthime 4.5 Heliconius charitonius 2.3 Heliconius eleuchia 1.9 3.3 Heliconius erato 1.7 Heliconius hecale 2.1 Heliconius melpomene 2.6 Heliconius sapho 2 Heliconius sara 2.7 Historis acheronta 6.5 4.3 Junonia evarete 2.3 3.8 Laparus doris 2.7 Marpesia chiron 4.6 Marpesia petreus 4.9 Mechanitis lysimnia 0.7 Mechanitis polymnia 2.5 Melinaea parallelis 2.5 Melinaea scylax 3.5 Morpho amathonte 2.6 Olyras insignis 2.5 Philaethria dido 2.5 Precis coenia 2.8 5.3 Precis lavinae 2.7 Pyrrhogyra crameir 2.2 Pyrrhogyra neaerea 1.8 Pyrrhogyra otolais 3.6 Siproeta stelenes 3.7 Vanessa atalanta 3.9 Vanessa cardui 2.2-6.1 4.9-8 Papilionidae Battus polydamas 5.8 Eurytides dolicaon 4.5 Eurytides ilus 4.5 Eurytides protesilaus 5.3 Papilio anchisiades 4.6 Papilio thoas 4.6 Parides arcas 2.9 Parides sesostris 3.1 Pieridae Anteos maerula 5.4 Aphrissa boisduvallii 5.1 Aphrissa statira 5.3 4 Appias drusilla 4 4 Ascia monuste 3.1-4.5 3.4 Colia philodice 1.3-2 Colias eurytheme 2.45 (0.15) Eurema proterpia 2.9 Itaballia demophile 2.7 Itaballia pandosia 2.2 Melete florinda 1.8 Phoebis agarithe 4.1 Phoebis argante 4.9 Phoebis philea 4.9 Phoebis sennae 3.61 4.1 5.1 6.2 4 Phoebis triste 4.8

f sp Nymphalidae Danaus eresimus (continued) Danaus gilippus Danaus plexippus

N/R/T/M 2 / A / A / FF 2 / A / A / FF 4 / A / A / FF   / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF 20 / A / A / M 20 / A / A / M 3 / A / A / FF 8 / A / A / FF 5 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 3 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 3 / A / A / FF 7 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 7 / A / A / FF 11 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 2 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 23 / A / A / FF 13 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 2 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 5 / A / A / FF 10 / A / G / FF 10 / A / A / FF 7 / A / G / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 2 / A / A / FF  /?/G/?   / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF 3 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 3 / A / A / FF 3 / A / A / FF 2 / A / A / FF 6 / A / A / FF 3 / A / A / FF 2 / A / A / FF 4 / A / A / FF 29 / A / A / FF 36 / A / A / FF 3 / A / A / FF 5 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF   / A / G / FF 14 / A / A / FF   / A / G / FF 9 / A / G / FF 1 / A / A / FF 3 / A / A / FF 2 / A / A / FF 1 / A / A / FF 3 / A / A / FF 18 / A / A / FF 6 / A / A / FF 66 / A / G / FF 45 / A / G / FF 45 / A / A / FF 3 / A / A / FF 25 / A / A / FF 2 / A / A / FF

reference o Dudley & Srygley 1994 Lepidoptera (continued) Srygley 2001 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Urquhart 1960 Urquhart 1960 Yueh 1999 Yueh 1999 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Mantodea Dudley & Srygley 1994 Neuroptera Dudley & Srygley 1994 Odonata Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Srygley 2001 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Srygley 2001 Orthoptera Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Balciunas & Knopf 1977 Balciunas & Knopf 1977 Correale & Crocker 1976 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Lane 1941 Abbott 1951 Williams 1930 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Srygley 2001 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Plecoptera Srygley 2001 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Srygley 2001 Nielsen 1961 Srygley 2001 Leigh & Smith 1959 Srygley & Kingsolver 1998 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Srygley 2001 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Correale & Crocker 1976 Balciunas & Knopf 1977 Balciunas & Knopf 1977 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Srygley 2001 Dudley & Srygley 1994 Psocoptera

sp Pieris rapae Pontia occidentalis Manduca sexta M. sexta towards light M. sexta away from light

m/s 2.35 (0.28) 2.1 (0.43) 5 0.4 (0.03) 0.29 (0.02) 0.57 1.02 1.58 3.38 22.3 13.4 Tortricidae Grapholita molesta 0.80 (0.27) Uraniidae Urania fulgens female 3.74 (0.26) Urania fulgens male 4.08 (0.21) Mantidae unknown 1.9-3.8 Chrysopidae Chrysopa carnea 0.76 Aeshnidae Austrophlebia costalis 25-27 Libellulidae Sympetrum sanguineum 2-5 Libellula luctuosa 1.86 (0.58) 0.41-4.44 Libellula lydia 2.12 (0.62) 0.68-6.64 Pachydiplax longipennis 1.54 (0.55) 0.53-2.89 Tramea lacerata 2.61 (0.85) 1.59-6.88 Acrididae Locusta migratora 3.6 (0.2) 4.6 4.6 Schistocerca gregaria 4.1 4.48 2.5 4.5-5 0.89 5.36 3.1 4.3 5.3 5.0 5.0 6.1 5.1 8.1 6.1 6.3 7.8 6.2 9.3 4.9-8 3.5 3.0-4.5 3.5-5.5 2.99 2.3-3.5 0.5-7 3 3.7 Austroperlidae Acruroperla atra 2.24 Tasmoperla thalia 1.56 Caopniidae various 3.2 (0.29) Capniidae Paracapnia angulata 2.4 Chloroperlidae Swelta onkos 2.9 various 6.3 (1.5) Gripopterygidae various 4.4 (1.66) Leuctridae various 4.2 (0.19) Leuctra hippopus 3.7 (0.7) Leuctra sibleyi 3.4 (0.54) Nemouridae Amphinemura nigritta 2.3 (0.66) Ostrocerca spp. 1.6 (0.42) Paranemoura perfecta 2.6 (0.54) various 3.2 (0.29) Notonemouridae various 6.3 (1.5) Perlodidae Isoperla sp. 2.4 Perlodidae various 6.3 (1.5) Taeniopterygidae various 3.2 (0.29) Taeniopteryx burski 2.3 (0.36) 2.9 (0.9) Stenopsocidae Stenopsocus immaculatus 0.85

f Pieridae (continued) Sphingidae

N/R/T/M 9 / A / G / FF 9 / A / G / FF   / X / A / FC 61 / A / A / FC 61 / A / A / FC 38 / A / A / FC 37 / A / A / FC 62 / A / A / FC 93 / A / A / FC  /?/G/?   / X / G / FF   / A / A / WT 14 / A / A / FF 13 / A / A / FF   / A / A / FC   / A / G / FC  /?/G/?   / A / A / FC 1805 / A / G / FF 1805 / R / G / FF 4411 / A / G / FF 4411 / R / G / FF 59 / A / G / FF 59 / R / G / FF 93 / A / G / FF 93 / R / G / FF   / A / A / FC   / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF 77 / A / A / FC 37 / A / A / FF   / N / A / FP  /A/A/T   / A / A / FF   / A / G / FF 16 / A / A / FF 17 / A / A / FF   / A / A / FF   / A / A / FF 12 / A / A / FF 17 / A / A / FF 11 / A / A / FF 17 / A / A / FF 21 / A / A / FF   / A / A / FF 16 / A / A / FF 23 / A / A / FF 12 / A / A / FF   / A / G / FF   / A / A / FC 158 / A / A / FC   / A / G / FF   / A / A / FF   / A / A / FC   / R / A / WT   / A / A / WT   / A / A / FC   / A / G / FF 3 / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF 1 / A / G / FF 1 / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF 28 / A / G / FF 4 / A / G / FF 7 / A / G / FF 4 / A / G / FF 8 / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF 1 / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF   / A / G / FF 5 / A / G / FF 5 / A / G / FF   / A / G / FC

reference Srygley & Kingsolver 1998 Srygley & Kingsolver 1998 Willmott & Ellington 1997/97b Spencer & al. 1997 Spencer & al. 1997 Stevenson & al. 1995 Stevenson & al. 1995 Stevenson & al. 1995 Stevenson & al. 1995 Lane 1941 McKeown 1944 Baker & al. 1984 DeVries & Dudley 1990 DeVries & Dudley 1990 May 1999 Lewis & Taylor 1967 Lane 1941 Wakeling & Ellington 1997 Tuxhorn & McShaffrey 1998 Tuxhorn & McShaffrey 1998 Tuxhorn & McShaffrey 1998 Tuxhorn & McShaffrey 1998 Tuxhorn & McShaffrey 1998 Tuxhorn & McShaffrey 1998 Tuxhorn & McShaffrey 1998 Tuxhorn & McShaffrey 1998 Kutsch & Fuchs 2000 Baker & al. 1981 Gewecke Fischer & Ebert 1999 Fischer & Kutsch 1999 Katz & Gosline 1993 Riley & al. 1988 Sayer 1965 Sayer 1965 Waloff 1972 Waloff 1972 Waloff 1972 Waloff 1972 Waloff 1972 Waloff 1972 Waloff 1972 Waloff 1972 Waloff 1972 Waloff 1972 Waloff 1972 Waloff 1972 Waloff 1972 Waloff & Rainey 1951 Weis-Fogh 1976 Weis-Fogh 1956 Weis-Fogh 1956 Weis-Fogh 1952 Weis-Fogh 1952 Zarnack & Wortmann 1989 Zarnack & Wortmann 1989 Kutsch & al. 1999 Marden & al. 2000 Marden & al. 2000 Marden & al. 2000 Kramer & Marden 1997 Kramer & Marden 1997 Marden & al. 2000 Marden & al. 2000 Marden & al. 2000 Kramer & Marden 1997 Kramer & Marden 1997 Kramer & Marden 1997 Kramer & Marden 1997 Kramer & Marden 1997 Marden & al. 2000 Marden & al. 2000 Kramer & Marden 1997 Marden & al. 2000 Marden & al. 2000 Kramer & Marden 1997 Marden & Kramer 1994 Lewis & Taylor 1967

Table 1. Published insect speeds in ms-1, errors in brackets; 1 m/s = 3.6 km/h ≅ 2.2 mph. N, number. R, range: A, average R; X, max R; N, min R. T, type: A, air-speed; G, ground-speed. This was difficult to determine especially for some early studies; readers are advised to check original reference. M, method: WT, wind tunnel; FF, free flying; FC, flight chamber; T, tethered; M, mill.

Chapter 2. Greatest host range R.A. Worth - Department of Entomology & Nematology, University of Florida, Gainesville, US-FL 32611-0620 - 1994-V-01

Abstract The fall webworm, Hyphantria cunea (Drury 1773) (Lepidoptera Arctiidae), probably has the widest host range for any insect. The larvae feed on an estimated 636 species of plants worldwide. This number appears to be higher than the records for gypsy moth and for japanese beetle. The gypsy moth seems to be limited by secondary plant metabolites but feeds on plants containing tannins. This factor does not appear to restrict the fall webworm.

Introduction Polyphagy is well known in the animal kingdom, and though many insects are specialists, some exploit the generalist way of life. Being a generalist has at least 2 advantages in terms of survival: 1. A ♀ may have an easier time finding a suitable host for oviposition using chemical cues if more hosts are acceptable; 2. An insect that finds a suitable food source easily can spend more time eating and growing and less time searching. Insect consumers can be grouped into four types: predators and parasitoids, parasites, detritivores, and herbivores. Each consumer has some potential for being a generalist in its category. Herbivores are apparently the best group to search for host records. Predators and parasitoids contain many specialists, but also some generalists which have poorly studied host preferences. Few insects are themselves parasites but they vector diseases. Detritus feeders feed on dead or organic matter but these are hard to classify as to specific host. Also, information on these is limited. Herbivores are more studied relative to their hosts due to the high number of agricultural pests. Also, a plant species is a well documented single unit. Thus I consider herbivores as the insects most likely to have the greatest host range. Defining what makes a host is difficult. Herbivores may be tested against plants to show willingness to feed, ability to feed, ability to develop fully, or the ability to develop partially. Some insects need more than one host to complete full development. In this chapter observed feeding will constitute a host record regardless of the effect on development of the insect and whether or not it was a lab or field observation. One host will equal one species of plant fed upon.

upon anything green." It has been collected from over 200 host species in the United States (Coulson & Witter 1984). In Europe, Warren & Tadic 1970 noted that it feeds on 219 species with 103 hosts in Hungary, 85 hosts in Yugoslavia, as well as 48 species in the former Soviet Union. In Japan more than 300 species of plants are hosts including trees, shrubs, weeds, and vegetables (Masaki & Umeya 1977), and in Korea 65 hosts are recorded (Woo 1961). The total number of observed hosts is 636 species (Warren & Tadic 1970).

Discussion It is unlikely that 636 is the exact number of hosts as this is based on different reports from different parts of the world. Warren and Tadic 1970 compiled the data of others and stated that their list is not considered final or complete and no distinction was made between food preferences for the black-headed and red-headed races. The Japanese beetle, Popillia japonica, was dismissed as a candidate for the most polyphagous because Fleming 1972 stated that it feeds on just under 300 species. The gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar, the other close candidate, is known for its damage in the United States and Canada to a wide number of hosts including some conifers. Miller & Hanson 1989 combined previous studies on host preference by L. dispar and reported that a total of 658 species had been tested and/or observed for suitability as hosts. The tests revealed that gypsy moth rejected many plants due to the presence of secondary plant metabolites, apparently toxic to it. It generally accepted plants containing tannins but lacking alkaloids, terpenoids, and glucosinolates. These plant compounds may partly restrict the host range of gypsy moth as compared to fall webworm. Some arctiid moths are known to sequester highly toxic chemical (Krasnoff & Dussourd 1989). H. cunea is by no means a specialist on poisonous plants, but considering its relationship to other Arctiidae, it may have mechanisms for handling plant toxins that the gypsy moth just cannot keep up with.

Acknowledgements I thank Dr. Dale Habeck and Dr. John Foltz of UF for their insight and information, and Kerri Schwarz of UF and Curtis Takahashi of US-CA Dept. of Food and Agriculture for info on the gypsy moth and Jap beetle.

Methods

REFERENCES

Professors and graduate students were asked to nominate candidates. Standard library techniques were used to investigate candidates, but the best results came from literature volunteered by a professor.

Coulson R.N., Witter J.A. 1984. Forest entomology: ecology and management. John Wiley & Sons, New York. Doane R.W. 1936. Forest insects: a textbook for the use of students. McGraw Hill, New York. Not seen; cited by Warren & Tadic 1970, p. 28. Fleming W.E. 1972. Biology of the Japanese beetle. USDA Tech. Bull. 1449. Krasnoff S.B., Dussourd D.E. 1989. Dihydropyrrolizine attractants for arctiid moths that visit plants containing pyrrolizidine alkaloids. J. Ch. Ecol. 15: 47-60. Masaki S., Umeya K. 1977. Larval life, pp. 13-29. In T. Hidaka [ed.], Adaptation and speciation in the fall webworm. Kodansha Ltd., Tokyo. Miller J.C., Hanson P.E. 1989. Laboratory feeding tests on the development of gypsy moth larvae with reference to plant taxa and allelochemicals. Oregon State Univ. Agric. Exp. Sta. Bull. 674. Warren, L.O., Tadic M. 1970. The fall webworm, Hyphantria cunea (Drury). Arkansas Agric. Exp. Sta. Bull. 759. Woo K.S. 1961. Studies on Hyphantria cunea, a newly introduced insect pest. M.S. thesis. Seoul Univ. Not seen; cited by Warren & Tadic 1970, p. 28.

Results Promising candidates were the gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar (Linnaeus 1758), and the japanese beetle Popillia japonica Newman 1838, but the most polyphagous insect appears to be the fall webworm moth, Hyphantria cunea (Drury 1773) (Lepidoptera Arctiidae). A native of North America, H. cunea had spread to Hungary by 1940, to Japan by 1947 and soon after into Korea (Warren & Tadic 1970). It is now a resident of most of the holarctic region. The number of plant species that are hosts for the fall webworm is staggering. An early report by Doane 1936 says that it "feeds on almost any tree except conifers... when almost full grown they scatter, feeding

4

Chapter 3. Longest diapause among insects Marcos R. de Faria - Dept. of Entomology & Nematology, University of Florida, Gainesville, US-FL 32611-0620 - 1994-V-01

Abstract

Discussion

The yucca moth Prodoxus y-inversus Riley 1892 (Lepidoptera Prodoxidae) has the longest reported diapause. Structures of Yucca baccata (Agavaceae) containing prepupae of this species were collected in Nevada, and successful emergence of adults was observed 19 years later, under artificial conditions.

Prolonged diapause may have appreciable adaptive value in habitats where resources are available only briefly each season and/or undergo erratic fluctuations in abundance (Sunose 1978). The prolonged diapause for P. y-inversus was observed under unnatural environmental conditions. The prepupae of this prodoxid insect were housed in sealed cardboard boxes, and then exposed to variable temperature and humidity regimes, subdued light, and without direct moisture from rainfall (Powell 1987). Powell 1989 pointed out that this example indicates a potential for successful dormancy of insects adapted to extremely arid climates for much greater periods than previously supposed. The physiological mechanisms of prolonged diapause are poorly understood (Tauber & al. 1986). Powell 1987 suggested that particular token stimuli needed to promote the late phases of diapause maintenance and diapause termination are not received. Hence, when thermal or other thresholds are reached that would have resulted in post diapause development, the diapause maintenance period continues. According to Powell 1984, the study of two prodoxid species, Prodoxus aenescens Riley 1881 and P. cinereus Riley 1881, indicated that temperature is the key factor in diapause development. Powell 1989 pointed out that exposure to temperatures that are colder than preceding winters are likely to interrupt the diapause maintenance in P. y-inversus.

Introduction Prolonged periods of dormancy are well-known among invertebrates. Brusca & Brusca 1990 reported that a dried museum specimen of moss yielded living tardigrades, a small phylum that appears to be closely tied to the annelid-arthropod line, when moistened after 120 years on the shelf. Some insects, such as the golden buprestid Buprestis aurulenta Linnaeus 1767, have an extended larval life. According to Linsley 1943, the larvae usually require from 1 to 3 years to complete their development, but Huguenin 1915 reported delayed emergence of specimens from structural timbers as long as 26 years after infestation. In a critical review, Smith 1962 presented 32 additional cases in British Columbia, with 11 of the cases being between 26 and 51 years. However, other cases of delayed emergence in insects may reflect diapause rather than prolonged larval development. Diapause, as defined by Tauber & al. 1986, is a neurohormonally mediated, dynamic state of low activity that occurs during a genetically determined stage(s) of metamorphosis, usually in response to environmental stimuli that precede unfavorable conditions. The objective of this chapter is to determine the longest diapause recorded for insects.

Acknowledgements I thank R.L. Brown, T.J. Walker, D.H. Habeck, and R. Lowen for identifying relevant literature.

Methods

REFERENCES

AGRICOLA, Biological Abstracts, CAB Abstracts and Life Science Collection were searched from year 1986 to the present. Secondary literature, mainly textbooks in entomology and ecology, also proved useful.

Barnes H.F. 1952. Studies of fluctuations in insect populations. XII. Further evidence of prolonged larval life in the wheat-blossom midges. Ann. Appl. Biol. 39: 370-373. Brusca R.C., Brusca G.J. 1990. Invertebrates. Sinauer Associates, Sunderland, Massachusetts. Danks H.V. 1987. Insect dormancy: an ecological perspective. Biological Survey of Canada, Ottawa, Canada. Huguenin J.C. 1915. An observation on a buprestid (Col.). Entom. News 26: 364-365. Linsley E.G. 1943. Delayed emergence of Buprestis aurulenta from structural timbers. J. Econ. Entomol. 35: 348-349. Powell J.A. 1984. Prolonged diapause in yucca moths, pp. 307. In: Proceedings of the 17th International Congress of Entom. Not seen; cited by Powell 1989. Powell J.A. 1987. Records of prolonged diapause in Lepidoptera. J Res Lepi 25:83-109. Powell J.A. 1989. Synchronized, mass-emergences of a yucca moth, Prodoxus yinversus after 16 and 17 years in diapause. Oecologia 81: 490-493. Smith D.N. 1962. Prolonged larval development in Buprestis aurulenta L. (Coleoptera Buprestidae). A review with new cases. Can. Entomol. 94: 586-593. Susone T. 1978. Studies on extended diapause in Hasegawaia sasacola Monzen (Diptera Cecidomyiidae) and its parasites. Kontyu 46: 400-415. Sunose T. 1983. Prolonged diapause in insects and its ecological significance. Kotaigun Seitai Gakkai, Kaihô 37: 35-48. Not seen; cited by Powell 1987. Tauber M.J., Tauber C.A., Masaki S. 1986. Seasonal adaptations of insects. Oxford University Press, New York.

Results Diapause lasting more than a year, also called "prolonged" or "extended" diapause, is known in many species of insects (Danks 1987). Sunose 1983 summarized cases of prolonged diapause and tabulated 64 insect species that present this phenomenon. In fact, prolonged diapause seems to be more common than one could imagine. Powell 1987 referred to approximately 90 species of Lepidoptera, in 10 superfamilies, that diapause for over one year. Barnes 1952, studying wheat-blossom midges (Diptera Cecidomyiidae), reported the emergence of Contarinia tritici Kirby 1798 after the larvae had been in soil up to 3 years, whereas larvae of Sitodiplosis mosellana (Géhin 1857) spent as many as 12 winters in the soil before emergence of the adults. However, Powell 1989 reported the emergence of adults of Prodoxus y-inversus Riley 1892, after prepupae spent 19 years in diapause.

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Chapter 4. Most tolerant of cold Jason P.W. Hall - Dept. of Entomology & Nematology, University of Florida, Gainesville, US-FL 32611-0620 - 1994-V-01

Abstract In laboratory tests, Hinton 1960 found that dehydrated larvae of the African chironomid Polypedilum vanderplanki Hinton 1951 (Diptera) could survive submersion in liquid helium (-270°C). This phenomenon seems related to its ability to tolerate extreme desiccation.

Introduction The aim of this chapter is to identify the insect species most tolerant to cold. "Most tolerant to cold" is here taken to mean ability to survive the lowest temperature. The search was an open ended one, such that the results could come from individuals studied under natural or laboratory conditions.

Methods I first searched the secondary literature, such as general ecology, entomology and physiology textbooks. All author's names associated with work on cold tolerance were then subjected to a literature search. AGRICOLA 1970-93 was also searched for reference to papers on cold tolerance in insects.

Results Hinton 1960 found that the dehydrated larvae of the African chironomid Polypedilum vanderplanki were able to withstand exposure to liquid helium (-270°C) for up to 5 min. with a 100% survival rate.

Discussion Surprisingly, the insect able to survive the lowest temperature is not found in polar regions, but in tropical West Africa. Polypedilum vanderplanki inhabits shallow pools which are subjected to repeated dehydration, and accordingly P. vanderplanki has evolved the capacity to tolerate severe desiccation in an anhydrobiotic state. It seems likely that it is due to this phenomenon that the insect is able to survive extreme temperatures. Hinton 1960 placed the larvae directly in liquid helium from room temperature. Only larvae that had been desiccated to a water content of 8% survived freezing at -270°C and subsequently metamorphosed, after warming and rehydration. When frozen fully hydrated, the larvae failed to recover, apparently because of damage to the fat body (Leader 1962). In contrast, elimination of body water in freezing-tolerant nonanhydrobiotic species can often be detrimental to the chances of survival at low temperatures (Salt 1961). The lowest temperature survived by any insect in a nonanhydrobiotic state is -196°C by the prepupae of the sawfly Trichiocampus populi Okamoto 1912. Tanno 1968 employed a 3-step procedure consisting of freezing the prepupae at -20°C, transferring them to -5°C for several hours and then slowly cooling them to -30°C before placing them in liquid nitrogen. After slow thawing, 75% survived and

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emerged as adults. It is possible that T. populi could also survive -270°C in liquid helium, but it has never been tested. Asahina & Tanno 1964 attributed this freeze tolerance ability to the presence of very high levels of the sugar trehalose. It is generally believed that survival of freezing occurs only if the site of ice formation is restricted to the extracellular space (Mazur 1984). This is also assumed to be true in the above two cases, although intracellular freeze tolerance has been reported by Salt 1959 in the fat body cells of the goldenrod gall fly Eurosta solidaginis (Fitch 1855). In the case of P. vanderplanki, it is clear that tolerance of freezing is in no way adaptive, since it is never subjected to sub-zero temperatures in its natural tropical environment, but is instead linked with its extraordinary ability to withstand a water content as low as 3%, which certainly is adaptive. The insect able to survive the lowest temperature for adaptive reasons is Pterostichus brevicornis (Kirby 1837). In laboratory tests, Miller 1969 found that the winter adult of this carabid beetle tolerates temperatures as low as -87°C, through use of the cryoprotectant glycerol. This beetle should thus be able to survive any natural temperatures in its Arctic environment. In many freeze tolerance experiments, workers define survival on the basis of directed coordinated activity like walking, feeding, and avoidance responses after rewarming (Miller 1969, Lee & Denlinger 1991). However, Baust & Rojas 1985 have rightly questioned this definition of survival in a biological context. For the purposes of this chapter, Miller's definition is adequate, but it could be argued that the only adaptive survival is reproductive survival. Few workers have tested whether insects that survive low temperatures maintain their ability to reproduce.

Acknowledgements I thank Dr. P. Teal and Dr. T. Walker, for informing me about authors working on cold tolerance in insects, and Dr. T.C. Emmel, for carefully editing drafts of the manuscript.

REFERENCES Asahina E., Tanno K. 1964. A large amount of trehalose in a frost resistant insect. Nature 204: 1222. Baust J.G., Rojas R.R. 1985. Review - Insect cold hardiness: facts and fancy. J. Insect Physiol. 31: 755-759. Hinton H.E. 1960. A fly larva that tolerates dehydration and temperatures of -270°C to +102°C. Nature 188: 333-337. Leader J.P. 1962. Tolerance to freezing of hydrated and partially hydrated larvae of Polypedilum (Chironomidae). J. Insect Physiol. 8: 155-163. Lee R.E. Jr., Denlinger D.L. (eds.) 1991. Insects at low temperature. Chapman & Hall, New York. Mazur P. 1984. Freezing of living cells: mechanisms & implications. Am. J. Physiol. 247: C125-C142. Miller L.K. 1969. Freezing tolerance in an adult insect. Science 166: 105-106. Salt R.W. 1959. Survival of frozen fat body cells in an insect. Nature 184:1426. Salt R.W. 1961. Principles of insect cold hardiness. Annu. Rev. Entomol. 6:58-74. Tanno K. 1968. Frost resistance in the poplar sawfly Trichiocampus populi. V. Freezing injury at the liquid N temperature. Low Temp. Sci. Ser. B 26:76-84.

Chapter 5. Most tolerant of desiccation Kerri Schwarz - Dept. of Entomology & Nematology - University of Florida, Gainesville, US-FL 32611-0620 - 1994-V-01

Abstract The larvae of the chironomid, Polypedilum vanderplanki Hinton, breed in small pools on unshaded rocks in northern Nigeria and Uganda where they withstand an environment which is alternately dry and flooded. Polypedilum vanderplanki is the only insect definitely known to endure cryptobiosis and survive drying to 48 h as adults, and most do not even have functional mouthparts. I have named the mayfly Dolania americana the shortest lived among Ephemeroptera with ♀♀ typically living for < 5 minutes (Sweeny & Vannote 1982).

Discussion In the search for the most ephemeral insect, 3 groups of what may be considered short-lived adults were found. Those whose adult life is typically measured in days, such as the Hessian fly with a span of ~4 days (Bergh & al. 1990) and the parasitic wasp Acmopolynema hervali Gomes 1848 which lives as an adult for 3 days or less (Boas & Andrade 1991). The next group is of those insects whose reproductive existence is measured in hours. Examples of this group are numerous and contain such species as the wasp Trichogrammatoidea bactrae Nagaraja 1979 which lives about 28 h (Hutchison & al. 1990), the moth Thaumetopoea pityocampa (Denis & Schiffermüller 1776) (Schmidt & al. 1990) and the mayflies Ephoron virgo (Olivier 1791) (Kureck & Fontes 1996) and Ephemera nadinae McCafferty &

Balasubramanian C., Venkataraman K., Sivaramakrishnan K.G. 1993. Bioecological studies on the burrowing mayfly Ephemera nadinae McCafferty & Edmunds 1973 (Ephemeroptera Ephemeridae) in Kurangani Stream, Western Ghats. J. Bombay Nat. His Soc. 89:72-77. Bergh J.C., Harris M.O., Rose S. 1990. Temporal patterns of emergence and reproductive behavior of the Hessian fly (Diptera Cecidomyiidae). Ann. Ent. S. Am. 83: 998-1004. Boas A.V.M., Andrade R.M. 1991. Preliminary observations on the biology of Acmopolynema hervali Gomes (Hymenoptera Mymaridae) a parasitoid of the spittlebug Mahanarva posticata Stal (Homoptera Cercopidae). An. S. Ent. Brasil. 19: 307-314. Hutchison W.D., Moratorio M., Martin J.M. 1990. Morphology and biology of Trichogrammatoidea bactrae (Hymenoptera Trichogrammatidae), imported from Australia as a parasitoid of pink bollworm (Lepidoptera Gelechiidae) eggs. Ann. Entom. Soc. Am. 83:46-54. Jones R.G., Gagne R.J., Barr W.F. 1983. Biology and taxonomy of the Rhopalomyia gall midges (Diptera Cecidomyiidae) of Artemisia tridentata (Compositae) in US-ID. Cont. Am. Entomol. Inst. 21:1-76. Kureck A., Fontes R.J. 1996. The life cycle and emergence of Ephoron virgo, a large potamal mayfly that has returned to the River Rhine. Arch. Hydrob. Suppl. 113: 319-323. Schmidt G.H., Koutsaftikis A., Breuer M. 1990. A contribution to the biology and predatory pressure of Thaumetopoea pityocamps (Den. & Schiff.) in Greece (Insecta Lepidoptera). Z. Angew. Zool. 77:395-422. Sweeney B.W., Vannote R.L. 1982. Population synchrony in mayflies: a predator satiation hypothesis. Evolution, 36:810-821.

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Chapter 38. Smallest adult Jerry E. Gahlhoff Jr. - Dept. of Entomology & Nematology, Univ. of Florida, Gainesville, US-FL 32611-0620 - 1998-IV-17

Abstract Based on overall length, the smallest adult insect is a parasitic wasp, Dicopomorpha echmepterygis Mockford 1997 (Hymenoptera Mymaridae). ♂♂ of this species are blind and wingless and measure 139 µm in BL. This species recently replaced Megaphragma caribea Delvare 1993 (Hymenoptera Trichogrammatidae), which measures 170 µm*, as the smallest adult insect. * Latest BLs of M. caribea from Colombia (181-224 µm) are slightly greater than the measurement provided by Delvare 1993 (Polilov 2017b).

Introduction The intent of this chapter is to identify the smallest adult insect. For holometabolous insects, an adult insect is defined as an individual that has emerged from pupa and/or is capable of reproduction. Insects which undergo hemimetabolous or ametabolous development are considered adults when growth / molting ceases or when they become sexually mature.

Methods A preliminary review of secondary literature and advice from expert entomologists in Coleoptera and parasitic Hymenoptera yielded several candidates. In particular, the Entomo-L Listserv and the Internet proved to be very useful. AGRICOLA was used to investigate primary literature of the candidates.

Results Obviously, wasps that parasitize eggs of other insects are quite small. Wasps of the egg-parasitic family Mymaridae not only represent some of the smallest known Hymenoptera, but are also among the smallest of all insects. A mymarid, Dicopomorpha echmepterygis, holds the record as smallest adult insect. The ♂♂ of this minute wasp are wingless and measure as little as 139 µm in BL. ♀♀ of this species are ~40% larger than the ♂♂.

Discussion Mockford 1997 described Dicopomorpha echmepterygis, and its discovery displaced a trichogrammatid sp., Megaphragma caribea, as smallest adult insect (Delvare 1993). At 170 µm in BL, M. caribea is only about 20% longer than D. echmepterygis. Adult feather-winged beetles in the family Ptiliidae also rival the small size of both species of parasitic wasps described above. Some feather-winged beetles measure as small as 250 µm in length (Borror & White 1970). Mockford 1997 provided a complete physical description as well as a brief biological observation of D. echmepterygis. When parasitized by D. echmepterygis, an egg of its psocid host, Echmepteryx hageni (Psocoptera Lepidopsocidae), typically yields 1-3 ♂♂ and a ♀ of the parasite. The ♂ of D. echmepterygis is blind and wingless but possesses long legs that it uses to attach itself to a ♀ wasp that is emerging from the egg of its host. The diminutive ♂♂ of D. echmepterygis require less nourishment to develop and are relegated to perform their primary responsibility, mating. On the other hand, vigorous ♀♀ of this species are winged and possess compound eyes suited to aid in dispersal (Mockford 1997). Mockford 1997 also suggests that the great degree of sexual dimorphism in this species may be attributed to the limited nutritional value provided by the egg of the psocid host. Diminutive ♂♂ such as those of D. echmepterygis may often be overlooked by researchers (Mockford 1997). Tiny ♂ wasps that parasitize eggs in families such as Mymaridae and Trichogrammatidae may be present in species with ♀♀ that are thought to reproduce parthenogenetically. Therefore, ♂♂ smaller than those of D. echmepterygis

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may exist among parasitic wasps, especially those that parasitize eggs of other insects.

Acknowledgements I thank John S. Noyes (Entomology Dept. NHM, London) and Greg Evans (UF Entomology & Nematology Dept.) for helping to identify pertinent literature.

Addendum, 2022-IX-20 Kikiki huna Huber & Beardsley 2000 (Hymenoptera Mymaridae) from Hawaii, Costa Rica, Nagarcoil and Trinidad, is the smallest flying insect known as of 2022, at 150 µm in BL. The monotypic genus Kikiki is a close relative of wasps in another monotypic genus, Tinkerbella, in which Tinkerbella nana Huber & Noyes 2013 from Costa Rica is at 250 µm in BL. Scydosella musawasensis Hall 1999 (Coleoptera Ptiliidae) is regarded as the smallest free-living (i.e. non-parasitic) insect, as well as the smallest beetle. This monotypic genus of featherwing beetles was first discovered in Nicaragua, and described in 1999 by W.E. Hall of the University of Nebraska State Museum. Initial discovery consisted of very few specimens, and exact measurements were not conclusive; the generally accepted size was 300 µm in BL. On 2015-II-08, A.A. Polilov of the Lomonosov Moscow State University collected 85 specimens in Chicaque N.P., Colombia. They were discovered on a layer of fungus on which they feed. From these specimens, exact measurements could be made: the smallest individual is only 325 µm long, the largest is 352 µm long, and the average BL of all the specimens is 338 µm. The currently recognized world's smallest fly is Megapropodiphora arnoldi Brown 2018 (Diptera Phoridae), described from a single limuloid ♀ from a site near Manaus (BR), at 395 µm in BL, slightly smaller than another phorid parasitoid fly, Euryplatea nanaknihali Brown 2012, from Thailand, at 400 µm.

REFERENCES Borror D.J., White R.E. 1970. Peterson field guides: Insects. Houghton Mifflin, NY. Brown B.V. 2018. A second contender for “world’s smallest fly” (Diptera Phoridae). Biodiversity Data J. 6(6): e22396. DOI: 10.3897/BDJ.6.e22396 Brown B.V. 2012. Small size no protection for acrobat ants: world's smallest fly is a parasitic phorid (Diptera Phoridae). Ann. Ent. S. Am. 105(4): 550-554. Delvare G. 1993. Sur Les Megaphragma de Guadeloupe avec la description d'une espèce nouvelle (Hymenoptera Trichogrammatidae). Rev. Fr. Ent. 15: 149-152. Hall W.E. 1999. Generic revision of the tribe Nanosellini (Coleoptera Ptiliidae Ptiliinae). Transactions of Am. Ent. Society. 125 (1/2): 39–126. Huber J.T., Beardsley J.W. 2000. A new genus of fairyfly, Kikiki, from the Hawaiian islands (Hymenoptera Mymaridae). Proc. Haw. Ent. Soc. 34: 65-70. Huber J.T., Noyes J.S. 2013. A new genus and species of fairyfly, Tinkerbella nana (Hymenoptera Mymaridae), with comments on its sister genus Kikiki, and discussion on small size limits in arthropods. Journal of Hymenoptera Research, 32: 17-44. https://doi.org/10.3897/jhr.32.4663. Mockford E.L. 1997. A new species of Dicomorpha (Hymenoptera Mymaridae) with diminutive, apterous males. Ann. Entomol. Soc. Am. 90: 115-120. Polilov A.A. 2017b. First record of Megaphragma (Hymenoptera Trichogrammatidae) in Columbia, and third animal species known to have anucleate neurons. J. of Hymenopt Res. 60: 181-185. https://doi.org/10.3897/jhr.60.19907. ISSN 1314-2607 Polilov A.A. 2017a. Anatomy of adult Megaphragma (Hymenoptera Trichogrammatidae), one of the smallest insects, and new insight into insect miniaturization. PLoS ONE 12(5): e0175566. doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0175566 Polilov A.A. 2015. How small is the smallest? New record and remeasuring of Scydosella musawasensis Hall 1999 (Coleoptera Ptiliidae), the smallest known free-living insect. ZooKeys (526): 61-64. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.526.6531 Polilov A.A. 2012. The smallest insects evolve anucleate neurons. Arthropod Struct. and Development 41: 27–32. DOI: 10.1016/j.asd.2011.09.001 Polilov A.A. 2011. Anatomy of the smallest coleoptera, featherwing beetles of the tribe Nanosellini (Coleoptera Ptiliidae), and limits of insect miniaturization. Ent. Rev. 88 (1): 26-33. DOI: 10.1134/S0013873808010041. S2CID 23604779.

Chapter 39. Fastest runner Thomas M. Merritt - Dept. of Entomology & Nematology, University of Florida, Gainesville, US-FL 32611-0620 - 1999-VII-31

Abstract Australian tiger beetles, genus Rivacindela Brouerius Van Nidek 1973 (Coleoptera Cicindelidae) are the fastest running insects known. The fastest, Rivacindela hudsoni (Sumlin 1997) [= Cicindela (Rivacindela) hudsoni Sumlin 1997], can run 2.5 m/s (5.6 mph).

Introduction Throughout time, races have been run in order to decide who or what is the fastest of its kind. Yet there has never been a race to determine the fastest insect in the world. Recently scientists studying movement and defense have published data on how fast some insects can run. Which insect is judged the fastest may depend on whether speed is measured in absolute terms (e.g. meters per second, m/s) or in relative terms (e.g. body lengths per second, bl/s). This chapter will decide that question and name a champion.

Methods I gathered information from professors and colleagues at the UF about possible candidates. To confirm these candidates and to find additional candidates I searched Biological Abstracts and CAB Abstracts databases for relevant articles. ISI Web of Knowledge was later used to search for articles that cited the articles that I had already obtained. I gathered other possible candidates through a posting on the Entomo-L Listserv. Finally, I attempted to contact authors of relevant papers through e-mail. The criteria established to determine the fastest insect are set as follows: A. At least 5 speed measurement runs must have occurred. B. The top speed of the insect must be within a plausible range compared to the multiple test runs. C. The methods and results must be published in a refereed journal.

Results I narrowed the field to 3 contenders for the fastest land insect: 1. The American cockroach Periplaneta americana (Linnaeus 1758) 2. The Australian tiger beetle Rivacindela hudsoni (Sumlin 1997) 3. The Australian tiger beetle Rivacindela eburneola (Sumlin 1997) Young (1998) named P. americana the current record holder with a maximum speed recorded at 1.5 m/s (3.4 mph). Full & Tu 1991 measured this speed using a specially designed pressure sensitive plate inserted into the roach's raceway. A computer recorded the pressure and time of each footfall, from the first footfall to the last, as the roach crossed the 10.7 cm plate. They also used high-speed cameras to measure time and movement over the set distance. Kamoun & Hogenhout 1996 reported that both R. hudsoni and R. eburneola were faster than P. americana, with maximum recorded speeds of 2.49 m/s (5.57 mph) and 1.86 m/s (4.16 mph). R. eburneola has a greater relative speed (171 bl/s) than both P. americana (50 bl/s) and R. hudsoni (120 bl/s). Kamoun & Hogenhout 1996 originally derived the speeds of the tiger beetles by measuring the time and distance the beetles moved when disturbed. The speeds were later reconfirmed for a few of the species of Australian tiger beetles, including R. eburneola, by

using video imaging. R. hudsoni was not reconfirmed, but the method used to measure its speed was verified (Kamoun 1999).

Discussion Many insects travel at great speeds for their own insect order but did not fall within the criteria established. One example is that Adams 1999 observed a tiger moth caterpillar, Apantesis vittata Fabricius 1787, that he recorded traveling at 3.13 mph (1.4 m/s) over a table top. However, the measurement was made only once and never published. The insects that were reviewed for this paper have some physiological modifications to their style of movement. P. americana was able to increase its speed to 1.5 m/s by running on its 2 hind legs (Full & Tu 1991). While it is known that most tiger beetles flee their potential predators through flight, for some tiger beetles flight is a waste of valuable energy and even a possible hazard to reproducing, since their natural habitat is isolated and food is scarce. Natural selection has helped to fix this problem by increasing their ground speed to the point where wings aren't needed. These tiger beetles evolved into a form with only vestigial wings and/or fused elytra. A few of the many species studied from the genus Rivacindela have vestigial or deformed wings, including the two speedsters R. hudsoni and R. eburneola (Kamoun & Hogenhout 1996). The final question now is which measurement of speed to use for the selection of the fastest runner: relative or absolute? If relative speed is the choice, the fastest running insect is R. eburneola. To convert its relative speed into human terms, a 6-foot man would move about 1,026 fps or ~0.2 miles per second or 720 mph. This speed almost breaks the sound barrier at sea level (732 mph) and would seem to clearly indicate a winner. Nonetheless, I decided that absolute speed would be the deciding factor for fastest land insect. The reasoning came from human contests for fastest land vehicle (763.035 mph; Young 1998); here size of the vehicle did not matter, only its absolute speed. In addition, for the fastest land animal size was not considered, again only its top speed (cheetah, 70 mph; Young 1998). Therefore, by this criterion the tiger beetle R. hudsoni is the fastest running insect.

Acknowledgements I thank Dr. T.J. Walker, Dr. S. Kamoun of Ohio State University, and Dr. J. Adams of Dalton State College for their help and info on this subject.

REFERENCES Adams J.K.1999. E-mail correspond., [email protected] Full R.J., Tu M.S. 1991. Mechanics of a rapid running insect: Two-, four-, and sixlegged locomotion. J. Exp. Biol. 156: 215-231. Gough H.M., Duran D.P., Kawahara A.Y., Toussaint E.F.A. 2018. A comprehensive molecular phylogeny of tiger beetles (Coleoptera Carabidae Cicindelinae). Systematic Entomology 44(2), 305-321. Kamoun S., Hogenhout S.A. 1996. Flightlessness and rapid terrestrial locomotion in tiger beetles of the Cicindela L. sg. Rivacindela Van Nidek from saline habitats of AU (Coleoptera Cicindelidae). Coleopt. Bull. 50: 221-230. Kamoun S. 1999. E-mail correspondence, [email protected] Sumlin W.D. 1997. Studies on the Australian Cicindelidae XII. Additions to Megacephala, Nickerlea and Cicindela with notes (Coleoptera). Bull. Worldwide Research 4(4), 1-56. Young M.C. 1998. The Guinness Book of Records 1998. Bantam Books, NY.

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Chapter 40. Largest eggs Salvatore Vicidomini - Italian Xylocopini Research Project Via Velardi 10 - Rione Arenula - 84014 Nocera Inferiore - Salerno (SA), Campania, IT - 2005-II-09

Abstract The largest insect eggs are those of carpenter bees (Xylocopini). The eggs of many species remain to be measured, but Xylocopa auripennis Lepeletier 1841 produced the largest egg reported thus far: 16.5 mm in length (L) and 3.0 mm in diameter (⌀).

Introduction Chapter 7 of UFBIR reviews the smallest eggs of insects. In order to complete this topic, the present chapter is a bibliographical review of the largest insect eggs.

Methods The following bibliographical databases were consulted for reports of measurements of the eggs of Xylocopini (carpenter bees): Biological Abstracts from 1927, Zoological Record from 1900, Apicultural Abstracts from 1966, Entomology Abstracts from 1969, Review of Applied Entomology Series A from 1913. For data on egg size in other insects, Hinton's 1981 3-volume Biology of Insect Eggs and references therein were consulted.

Results After surveying the "egg capacity" of insects and the number and size of eggs in Hymenoptera, Iwata 1964 concluded that giant eggs were found only in the subsocial Hymenoptera and that the Xylocopini (carpenter bees) produced the largest insect eggs in absolute terms. However, Iwata gave no measurements for eggs other than for those of Hymenoptera, leaving uncertain how thoroughly he had reviewed egg size in other orders. Anderson 1972a, 1972b lists representative egg dimensions for 21 species in 12 orders of hemimetabolous insects and 35 species in 8 orders of holometabolous insects. The longest eggs he lists for Hemimetabola are 6-8 mm, for Locusta migratoria (Linnaeus 1758) (Orthoptera); the largest eggs he lists for Holometabola are 3.75 mm long × 0.85 mm wide, for Chalicodoma muraria (Hymenoptera). Because Anderson did not report any measurements of carpenter bee eggs, it is evident that he may have missed the largest eggs in other orders as well. However, unable to find any evidence to the contrary, I assumed that Iwata 1964 was correct and confined my further efforts to researching the sizes of the eggs of Xylocopini. Table 1 lists all the Xylocopini species with published data on egg size. The eggs of Xylocopa auripennis are largest, because they have the greatest ⌀ (3.0 mm) and a L (16.5 mm) that is equaled only by X. latipes. However, Iwata 1964 derived the egg dimensions for X. latipes (16.5 × 2.6 mm) from measurements of a "near-mature ovarian egg" and suggested that future field observations may prove that X. latipes deposits the largest eggs.

Discussion Data on egg size are scarce. In order to complete the search for the largest egg, it will be necessary to measure adequate samples of the eggs of the largest Xylocopini spp.: Xylocopa fimbriata, Fabricius 1804, X. flavorufa (DeGeer 1778), X. frontalis (Olivier 1789), X. latipes (Drury 1773), X. nigrita (Fabricius 1775), X. tenuiscapa Westwood 1840, X. torrida (Westwood 1838), X. tranquebarica (Fabricius 1804) (X. flavorufa and X. nigrita are included

because they are polytypic spp., making it desirable to supplement the existing data). This chapter seeks to identify the insect eggs that are largest in absolute size, but it is worth noting that Iwata & Sakagami 1966 also attempted to determine which carpenter bees produced the largest eggs relative to the ♀ size. To do that they calculated an egg index by dividing the L of the largest mature oocyte (EL) by the maximum distance between outer rims of ♀ tegulae (TD): egg index = EL/TD. As can be seen in Table 1, X. tranquebarorum has the largest egg index (2.00). However, the insect that produces the largest eggs relative to ♀ size is probably not a carpenter bee. Sexual ♀♀ of some aphids produce a single large egg that overwinters and the following spring produces a stem mother, whose success partly depends on her size - for example, Daktulosphaira vitifoliae (Fitch 1855) [(= Phylloxera vastatrix Planchon 1868)] and Pemphigus betae Doane 1900 (Iwata 1964, Whitham 1979).

Acknowledgments Thomas J. Walker contributed to the research for this chapter.

REFERENCES Anderson D.T. 1972a. Development of hemimetabolous insects, pp. 95-163. In: S.J. Counce & C.H. Waddington (eds.), Development systems: insects. v.1. Academic, London. Anderson D.T. 1972b. Development of holometabolous insects, pp. 165-242. In: S.J. Counce & C.H. Waddington (eds.), Development systems: insects. v.1. Academic, London. Anzenberger G. 1977. Ethological study of african carpenter bees of genus Xylocopa (Hymenoptera Antophoridae). Z. Tierpsychol., 44: 337-374. Bonelli B. 1967. Osservazioni biologiche sugli Imenotteri melliferi e predatori della Val di Fiemme (XXIV). Xylocopa cyanescens Brullè (iris Christ). B. Ist. Ent. U. B., 28: 253-263. Eardley C.D., 1983. A taxonomic revision of the genus Xylocopa Latreille in southern Africa. Entomol. Mem. Dept. Agric. Wat. Suppl. Rep. South Afr., 58: III+67 pp. Gerling D., Hurd P.D., Hefetz A. 1983. Comparative behavioral biology of two middle east spp. of carpenter bees (Xylocopa Latreille). Smiths. Contr. Zoo. 369: 1-28. Hinton H.E. 1981. Biology of insect eggs. Pergamon Press, Oxford. 3 v.1125 p. Houston T.F. 1992. Biological observations of the Australian green carpenter bees, genus Lestis (Hymenoptera Anthophoridae Xylocopini). Rec. W. AU Mus., 15(4): 785-798. Iwata K. 1964. Egg gigantism in subsocial Hymenoptera with ethological discussion on tropical bamboo carpenter bees. Nature & Life S.E. Asia, Kyoto, 3: 399-434. Iwata K., Sakagami, S.F. 1966. Gigantism and dwarfism in bee eggs in relation to the mode of life, with notes on the number of ovarioles. Jap. J. Ecol., 16(1): 4-16. Janvier H. 1977. Comportamiento de Xylocopa violacea Linneo, 1758 (Hymenoptera). Graellsia, 32: 193-213. Maa T.C. 1970. A revision of the Subgenus Ctenoxylocopa (Hymenoptera Anthophoridae). Pacific Insect, 12(4): 723-752. Maeta Y., Sakagami, S.F., Shiokawa M. 1985. Observation on nest aggregation of the taiwanese bamboo carpenter bee Xylocopa (Biluna) tranquebarorum tranquebarorum (Hymenoptera Anthophoridae). J. Kansas Entomol. Soc., 58(1): 36-41. Pagliano G., Nobile V. 1993. Il genere Xylocopa Latreille 1802 in Italia (Hymenoptera Apoidea). Boll. Accad. Gioenia Sci. Nat. Catania, 26(342): 133-144. Rozen J.G., Özbek H., 2003. Oocyte, eggs and ovarioles of some long-tongued bees (Hymenoptera Apoidea). Amer. Mus. Novit., 3393: 1-35. Stark R.E., Hefetz, A., Gerling D., Velthuis H.H.W. 1990. Reproductive competition involving oophagy in socially nesting bee Xylocopa sulcatipes. Naturwissen 77:38-40. Vicidomini S. 1996. Biologia di Xylocopa (Xylocopa) violacea (L. 1758) (Hymenoptera Apidae): l'uovo. Atti Soc. Ital. Sci. Nat. Milano, 137(1): 37-46. Whitham T.G. 1979. Territorial behaviour of Pemphigus gall aphids. Nat. 279:324-325.

Table 1. Published measurements of eggs of Xylocopini. EI, egg index = EL/TD. Xylocopa sp. X. appendiculata Smith 1852 X. auripennis Lepeletier 1841 X. bombylans (Fabricius 1775) X. flavorufa (DeGeer 1778) X. imitator Smith 1854 X. iris (Christ 1791) X. latipes (Drury 1773) X. nigrita (Fabricius 1775) X. olivieri Lepeletier 1841 X. sulcatipes Maa 1970 X. tranquebarorum (Swederus 1787) X. tranquebarorum (Swederus 1787) X. violacea (Linnaeus 1758) X. violacea (Linnaeus 1758)

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L 12.5 16.5 9.0 13.0 10.0 8.0 16.5 15.0 7.2 11.0 13.0 15.7 12.0 11.3

⌀ 2.5 3.0   2.5 2.3   2.6 2.7 1.7 2.2   2.9   2.4

EI 1.38 1.72         1.38   1.09     2.00   1.31

reference Iwata 1964; Iwata & Sakagami 1966 Iwata 1964; Iwata & Sakagami 1966 Houston 1992 Anzenberger 1977; Eardley 1983 Anzenberger 1977; Eardley 1983 Bonelli 1967; Pagliano & Nobile 1993 Iwata 1964; Iwata & Sakagami 1966 Anzenberger 1977; Eardley 1983 Rozen & Özbek 2003 Gerling & al. 1983; Maa 1970; Stark & al. 1990 Maeta & al. 1985 Iwata 1964; Iwata & Sakagami 1966 Janvier 1977 Vicidomini 1996

UFBIR 2023

Table of contents Preface Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Chapter 20 Chapter 21 Chapter 22 Chapter 23 Chapter 24 Chapter 25 Chapter 26 Chapter 27 Chapter 28 Chapter 29 Chapter 30 Chapter 31 Chapter 32 Chapter 33 Chapter 34 Chapter 35 Chapter 36 Chapter 37 Chapter 38 Chapter 39 Chapter 40

Fastest flyer Greatest host range Longest diapause Most tolerant of cold Most tolerant of desiccation Shortest generation time Smallest eggs Most spectacular mating Fastest wing beat Least specific sucker of vertebrate blood Longest insect migration Longest life cycle Most instars Most parental sharing of brood care Resistant to most insecticides Shortest sexual life cycle Lowest lifetime fecundity Highest lifetime fecundity Adapted to greatest depths Least oxygen dependent Most heat tolerant Most saline tolerant Most toxic venom Loudest Greatest host specificity Largest parasitoid brood Largest swarm Most spectacular batesian mimicry Greatest bioluminescence Largest Largest blood meal Largest lepidopteran wing span Longest Longest adult life Longest regularly repeated migration Most polyandrous Shortest reproductive life Smallest adult Fastest runner Largest eggs

T.J. Walker T.J. Dean R.A. Worth M.R. de Faria J.P.W. Hall K. Schwarz T. Li V.E. Cevallos D. Sieglaff C.W. Scherer L.M.A. Okedi C. Tipping Y. Zeng B.R. Sojack K. Vulinec B.L. Vasquez L. Yang B.C. Nygård H. Brueland A.A. Akers A. Rasmussen V. Sherwood D. Richman W.L. Meyer J.M. Petti G.H. Schneider J.M. Alvarez A. H. Sanchez-Arroyo M. Salvato H.C. Levy D.M. Williams K.E. McKenzie H.L. Kons Jr. D. Branscome R. Cetintas J. Akers Pence H. Cabrera-Mireles C.H. Welch J.E. Gahlhoff Jr. T.M. Merritt S. Vicidomini

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